tablejumper

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 49 points 9 months ago (2 children)

Alec is the dude who made me willingly watch and enjoy 90 minutes of discussion on Dishwasher detergents.

Or 30 minutes on just the color Brown

Or 60 minutes (across multiple videos) on Christmas LED lights

Suffice it to say, he can make mundane topics pretty interesting to watch

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Can you really? I'd love some pointers on that. I'll try to look it up more, thanks

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Update: I took some suggestions and ideas from the comments here and built a system for this:

  • Create the mountpoint directories
  • Add the mounts to /etc/fstab with the user,noauto option
  • I'm using quadlets, so add a new [service] section to my container file and add ExecStartPre and ExecStopPost entries with mount and umount commands
  • Add bind mount volumes to the NFS shares pointing to the local mountpoint

This allows me to have the mounts only active when the container is running. And I can still have rootless podman containers. Seems to be working well in the limited testing I did yesterday.

 

I'm trying to switch my existing Docker setup to a rootless podman one. The main issue tripping me is how to mount remote volumes. My file server is a different machine, so I mount the data into docker containers via a NFS volume. However, I can't do this with podman since the normal user doesn't have the rights for mounting NFS drives. Only the root user can do that.

One option I've thought of is to mount everything I need via fstab and use bind mounts. Is there a better solution?